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What Is the Debt-to-Net Worth Formula?

Most of us don’t know what our debt-to-net worth ratio is or what formula to use to determine it. It’s worth crunching the numbers now and then, though, to get an idea of our financial health and progress.

Simple, right? All your assets include your home equity, the value of all your possessions (such as your car, your furniture, your clothing, your extensive board game collection, and so on), your savings and checking accounts, investment accounts, bonds, CDs, and any cash or cash equivalents you have. Add them all together.

Next up, total all your debts, which might include the balance owed on your mortgage, any car loan debt, student loans, and credit card debt. Subtracting debts from assets gives you your net worth. Ideally, this number will be large and growing. At a minimum, it should be positive – though many people carrying heavy debts are often net-worth-negative.

So if you owe a total of $85,000 and your assets are worth $155,000, your debt-to-net worth ratio will be 85,000 / 155,000, or 55%.

The lower the ratio, the healthier you'll appear to anyone assessing your ratio. A low number suggests minimal debt. Any result over 100% reflects someone who owes more than their net worth. That's not a portent of doom, but it might keep a lender from eagerly lending you any more money -- or it might lead the lender to levy a higher interest rate, to compensate it for the extra risk it's taking on.

Remember that these ratios reflect your condition at a point in time, and they can and will change over time, for better or worse. Many college students and recent graduates will inevitably have negative ratios because of having just started out in life on their own, often with substantial student-loan debt.

A business's debt-to-net worth ratioBusinesses also have debt-to-net worth ratios, which suggest how financially healthy they are. Just as the lenders we individuals borrow from will want to know about our debt-to-net worth ratios (and, often, our debt-to-income ratios), businesses also face lenders or investors with similar concerns.

A high debt-to-net worth ratio will suggest to a prospective lender or investor that the business has already taken on a lot of debt, and that it's therefore more risky than many other companies. After all, having debt means that it's on the hook for paying that debt off, and those debt obligations can render it less nimble, less able to weather tough times, and perhaps less able to make any more repayments on further debt. Again, the lower the ratio, the better.

Many investors will assess the debt burden of any company they're considering investing in, and a common metric evaluated is the debt-to-equity ratio, which is essentially a debt-to-net worth ratio. Equity in this case, after all, is the company's total assets less its total liabilities. The result is typically labeled "shareholder equity" on the balance sheet.

The debt-to-net worth ratio as an economic indicatorFinally, know that debt-to-net worth ratios will also pop up occasionally as economic indicators in your financial reading. For example, in June of 2015, researcher Danielle Hale at the National Association of Realtors noted that the net worth of households and non-profits had hit a record high, though debt, which had been falling a while back, had started inching up again in the past few years. Realtors and others have a great interest in household debt and net worth levels, as rising net worth and falling debt levels can make for a population more able to buy homes.

Most of us don't know what our debt-to-net worth ratio is or what formula to use to determine it. It's worth crunching the numbers now and then, though, in order to get an idea of our financial health and progress. It can come in handy when evaluating companies, too.

Now that you've brushed up on your net worth, how about finding out more about brokers to help you invest your money?

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